New Life For QuickReach?

Walter Pincus informs us that the Pentagon has gotten a hundred million for the Falcon program (though I’m not sure why the headline calls it a “space defense program”):

The agency describes Falcon as a “a reusable Hypersonic Cruise Vehicle (HCV) capable of delivering 12,000 pounds of payload at a distance of 9,000 nautical miles from [the continental United States] in less than two hours.”

Hypersonic speed is far greater than the speed of sound. The reusable vehicle being contemplated would “provide the country with significant capability to conduct responsive missions with quick turn-around sortie rates while providing aircraft-like operability and mission-recall capability,” according to DARPA.

The vehicle would be launched into space on a rocket, fly on its own to a target, deliver its payload and return to Earth. In the short term, a small launch rocket is being developed as part of Falcon. It eventually would be able to boost the hypersonic vehicle into space. But in the interim, it will be used to launch small satellites within 48 hours’ notice at a cost of less than $5 million a shot.

Does this mean renewed Air Force interest in AirLaunch and QuickReach, or does all of the launcher money go to SpaceX? And how are the funds apportioned between launcher and hypersonic vehicle?